Williams v. Worthington

49 Md. 572, 1878 Md. LEXIS 78
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJuly 24, 1878
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 49 Md. 572 (Williams v. Worthington) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Williams v. Worthington, 49 Md. 572, 1878 Md. LEXIS 78 (Md. 1878).

Opinion

Bartol, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The bill of complaint in this case was filed by the appellees, claiming as devisees and legatees under the will of their late father, Brice T. B. Worthington, for the purpose of enforcing an alleged trust, in favor of their testator, under the will of Dr. Asa Anderson, deceased.

The appellants, respondents below, who claim as executor, devisees and legatees under the will of Mrs. Eliza Anderson, deceased, demurred to the bill, and have appealed from the decision of the Circuit Court overruling the demurrer. The question presented' by the appeal is the construction of Dr. Anderson’s will, which contains the following clause, relied on as creating the trust: £‘ It is my will and desire, and I hereby devise and bequeath all my property real, personal and mixed, of what kind or nature soever, and wheresoever situated, to my dear wife Eliza Anderson, and her heirs and assigns forever, and it is my request and desire that my wife Eliza Anderson [579]*579should, by last will and testament, devise and bequeath all of the said property at her death remaining in her possession, to my friend Brice T. B. Worthington of Annapolis, and to Elizabeth Williams, daughter of Theodore Williams, of Prince George’s County, to the said Brice T. B. Worthington and Elizabeth Williams, and their heirs and assigns forever, equally share and share alike.”

With respect to the disposition of the property to be made by his wife, the testator does not use imperative language, but expresses his wish and desire merely.

It is not denied or questioned however, by the appellants, that precatory words such as these, may create a trust. They have been so construed in a great many decided cases which need not be particularly cited. These will be found collected in the elementary works. Perry on Trusts, sec. 112, et seq.; Lewin on Trusts, 104, et seq.; Hill on Trustees, 108, &c.; and 2 Story’s Eq. J., secs. 1068 to 1078.

‘'The eifeet of expressions of this nature in creating a trust depends entirely on the supposed intention of the donor (or testator) to be gathered from the tenor of the instrument.” Hill on Trustees, 114.

In 17 Md., 165, (Negro Chase vs. Plummer,) it was said, " It has been frequently decided both in England, and in this country, that words of recommendation, desire, hope and such like, will raise a trust to be executed by the persons to whom they are addressed. But such expressions aie not always imperative ; they are flexible in character, and whether they are to prevail in a particular case is always a question of construction upon the whole will.” It is not easy to extract from the decided cases any very clear or well defined rule to govern us in the construction of the will under consideration ; that must necessarily depend upon its particular provisions, and the intention of the testator to be derived from its terms.

It may be laid down, however, as well settled upon all the authorities, that in order to justify the Court in con[580]*580struing precatory words in a will as creating a trust, it must appear that the property which is the subject of the trust is definite and certain.

In this case the will gives Mrs. Anderson the absolute estate in fee, and then requests and desires that she should at her death devise all the said property remaining in her possession to B. T. B. Worthington and E. Williams.

The trust is sought to be established, not with respect to all the property devised by Dr. Anderson to his widow, not with respect to any specific part thereof described in the will, but with respect to so much thereof as might remain in her possession at her death. Now how can it be said that the subject of the supposed trust is certain and definite.

Having the absolute estate, Mrs. Anderson undoubtedly possessed the power of disposing of the property, according to her own discretion, unless by the terms of the will her discretion and power of disposition were fettered and controlled. If the precatory words had related to the whole of the property devised to her, there are many decided cases which hold that the words indicating the ultimate disposition which the testator desired her to make would charge the property with a trust in favor of the persons named, notwithstanding the gift to her was in fee. Such are the cases of Mace vs. Mallorn, 21 L. J. (Ch.,) 355; Gully vs. Cregoe, 24 Beav., 185, and Shovelton vs. Shovelton, 32 Beav., 143, cited by the appellees, and other cases might be referred to, to the same effect.

But in this case, it appears to us, the power of disposition by Mrs. Anderson, implied in the absolute gift of the property to her, cannot be said to be limited or controlled by the subsequent words, which have reference only to such property as might remain in her possession at the time of her death.

“Where there is a right in a donee to spend the subject of the gift, that is inconsistent with the nature of such-[581]*581a precatory trust to bequeath it over to any other person.” Cowman vs. Harrison, 17 L. & Eq. R., 290.

In construing wills containing precatory words, a distinction has been drawn between cases where the gift to the first devisee is for life only, and those in which the gift is absolute, with superadded words. Howarth vs. Dewell, 6 Jur. (N. S.,) 1360.

We have found no well considered case in which a trust of this kind has been supported, where the gift to the first devisee was absolute in its terms, followed by precatory words, indicating the disposition to be made of what might he left, or what might remain of the property, at the death of the first devisee.

In such case the attempt to establish the trust has failed, first, for the reason that such expressions in the will can properly be construed only as conferring on the first devisee unlimited discretion and power of disposition, and secondly, because in such case the subject of the supposed trust is altogether indefinite and uncertain.

Many cases are cited in Lewin on Trusts, 108. We refer to some of them that appear to be analogous to the present.

In Bland vs. Bland, 2 Cox’s Ch. Cases, 349, (decided in 1745,) the devise was in fee, with the request “ as to the said premises, or so much thereof as he (the devisee) shall stand seized of at the time of his death.”

Lord Hardwick decided that the previous devise in fee imported a power in the devisee to diminish the property.

He said, “It was the same as if the testator had said I leave it to you to dispose of it as you think fit, but I will be glad if you will give so much as you can spare, so and so.”

In Wynne vs. Hawkins, 1 Bro. Ch. R., 179m, (decided in 1782,) the will after leaving certain legacies, proceeded as follows : “ And as I shall leave behind me, over and above the said legacies, only sufficient for a decent maintenance [582]

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Bluebook (online)
49 Md. 572, 1878 Md. LEXIS 78, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/williams-v-worthington-md-1878.